Eeeyah.com
Statistics and analysis on horse races conducted in Singapore and
Malaysia. Providing multi-layer relational analysis of horses,
trainers, jockeys, owners, etc based on many years of past races.

expekt.com
offer some of the market best odds on a large number of sporting events 24
hours a day in Thai language. Our site is developed with the same demands
on security and performance as the sites used for bank services.

Between 24 October to 18 November 2007,
Singapore police conducted a series of island-wide raids targeted at
illegal soccer bookmaking activities and arrested a total of 20 persons
for illegal soccer bookmaking and gambling activities...

To discourage locals from developing into problem gamblers,
Section 116 of the Bill shall require the casino operators to
collect an entry levy from Singapore Citizens and Permanent
Residents for every consecutive 24 hours in the casinos or
$2,000 for an annual membership.

This levy
will also underscore the message that gambling is an expense
and not a means to get rich...

Section 108
of the Bill shall prohibit casino and junket operators from
extending credit to Singapore Citizens and Permanent
Residents, unless they maintain a credit balance of at least
$100,000 with the casino operator at the start of their gaming
which would qualify them as premium players.

Automated
Teller Machines or ATMs shall be prohibited within the casinos
under Section 109 of the Bill so that patrons will not have
easy access to their savings accounts to gamble continuously.

Minors are
also another potentially vulnerable group who may fall prey to
the glamour of the casino, without realising the possible
dangers of gambling. Sections 130 to 137 of the Bill will
prohibit persons below the age of 21 years from entering the
casinos...

"But the number of unlicensed moneylending
and related harassment cases continues to rise: from some 1,500 cases in
1995 to almost 6,000 cases in 2004.

"In some instances, parties who did not
borrow money were also harassed; for example, new occupants of dwellings
that were formerly occupied by debtors and people who had lost or
misplaced their identity cards.

"In addition, the number of arrests made in
harassment cases more than doubled from 123 arrests in 2003 to 284
arrests in 2004..."

"...We cannot stand still. The whole region is on the
move. If we do not change, where will we be in 20 years’ time? Losing our
appeal to tourists is the lesser problem. But if we become a backwater, just
one of many ordinary cities in Asia, instead of being a cosmopolitan hub of
the region, then many good jobs will be lost, and all Singaporeans will
suffer. We cannot afford that..."

Singapore Pools will
come under the Singapore Totalisator Board (Tote Board) from 1 Apr
2004. The board will have the sole right to conduct all betting
activities and manage donation of surpluses. (Straits Times 26 Feb
2004) (H3)